Post on 31-Mar-2018
THE
THE
LIFE OF CHRIST
BY
FREDERIC W. FARRAR, D.D., F.R.S.
Illustrations by
GUSTAVE DORE AND OTHERS
Digitized by Ted Hildebrandt, with help from Amber Bensing, Apurva Thanju and Nick Ware, Gordon College 2007
PREFACE.
IN fulfilling a task so difficult and so important as that of writing
the Life of Christ, I feel it to be a duty to state the causes which led
me to undertake it, and the principles which have guided me in carry-
ing it to a conclusion.
1. It has long been the desire and aim of the publishers of this
work to spread as widely as possible the blessings of knowledge; and,
in special furtherance of this design, they wished to place in the hands
of their readers such a sketch of the Life of Christ on earth as should
enable them to realize it more clearly, and to enter more thoroughly
into the details and sequence of the Gospel narratives. They there-
fore applied originally to an eminent theologian, who accepted the
proposal, but whose elevation to the Episcopate prevented him from
carrying it out.
Under these circumstances application was made to me, and I could
not at first but shrink from a labor for which I felt that the amplest
leisure of a lifetime would be insufficient, and powers incomparably
greater than my own would still be utterly inadequate. But the con-
siderations that were urged upon me came no doubt with additional
force from the deep interest with which, from the first, I contem-
plated the design. I consented to make the effort, knowing that I
could at least promise to do my best, and believing that he who does
the best he can, and also seeks the blessing of God upon his labors,
cannot finally and wholly fail.
And I have reason to be thankful that I originally entered upon the
task, and, in spite of all obstacles, have still persevered in it. If the
following pages in any measure fulfil the objects with which such a
2 PREFACE.
Life ought to be written, they should fill the minds of those who read
them with solemn and not ignoble thoughts ; they should " add sun-
light to daylight by making the happy happier;" they should encour-
age the toiler ; they should console the sorrowful ; they should point
the weak to the one true source of moral strength. But whether this
book be thus blessed to high ends, or whether it be received with
harshness and indifference, nothing at least can rob me of the deep
and constant happiness which I have felt during almost every hour
that has been spent upon it. Though, owing to serious and absorb-
ing duties, months have often passed without my finding an oppor-
tunity to write a single line, yet, even in the midst of incessant labor
at other things, nothing forbade that the subject on which I was
engaged should be often in my thoughts, or that I should find in it a
source of peace and happiness different, alike in kind and in degree,
from any which other interests could either give or take away.
2. After I had in some small measure prepared myself for the
task, I seized, in the year 1870, the earliest possible opportunity to
visit Palestine, and especially those parts of it which will be forever
identified with the work of Christ on earth. Amid those scenes
wherein He movedin the
* * * " holy fields .
Over whose acres walked those blessed feet
Which, eighteen hundred years ago, were nailed
For our advantage, on the bitter cross"
in the midst of those immemorial customs which recalled at every
turn the manner of life He livedat Jerusalem, on the Mount of
Olives, at Bethlehem, by Jacob's Well, in the Valley of Nazareth,
along the bright strand of the Sea of Galilee, and in the coasts of
Tyre and Sidonmany things came home to me, for the first time,
with a reality and vividness unknown before. I returned more than
ever confirmed in the wish to tell the full story of the Gospels in
such a manner and with such illustrations aswith the aid of all
that was within my reach of that knowledge which has been accu-
mulating for centuriesmight serve to enable at least the simple
and the unlearned to understand and enter into the human surround-
ings of the life of the Son of God.
PREFACE. 3
3. But, while I say this to save the book from being judged by a
false standard, and with reference to ends which it was never intended
to accomplish, it would be mere affectation to deny that I have hoped
to furnish much which even learned readers may value. Though
the following pages do not pretend to be exhaustive or specially
erudite, they yet contain much that men of the highest learning have
thought or ascertained. The books which I have consulted include
the researches of divines who have had the privilege of devoting to
this subject, and often to some small fragment of it, the best years
of laborious and uninterrupted lives. No one, I hope, could have
reaped, however feebly, among such harvests, without garnering at
least something, which must have its value for the professed theolo-
gian as well as for the unlearned. And because I believedand
indeed most earnestly hoped that this book might be acceptable to
many of my brother-clergymen, I have admitted into the notes some
quotations and references which will be comparatively valueless to
the ordinary reader. But, with this double aim in view, I have tried
to avoid "moving as in a strange diagonal," and have never wholly
lost sight of the fact that I had to work with no higher object than
that. thousands, who have even fewer opportunities than myself,
might be the better enabled to react that one Book, beside which
even the best and profoundest treatises are nothing better than poor
and stammering fragments of imperfect commentary.
4. It is perhaps yet more important to add that this Life of
Christ is avowedly and unconditionally the work of a believer.
Those who expect to find in it new theories about the divine person-
ality of Jesus, or brilliant combinations of mythic cloud tinged by
the sunset imagination of some decadept belief, will look in vain.
It has not been written with any direct. and special reference to the
attacks of sceptical criticism. It is not even intended to deal other-
wise than indirectly with the serious doubts of those who, almost
against their will, think themselves forced to lapse into a state of '
honest disbelief. I may indeed venture to hope that such readers, if
they follow me with no unkindly spirit through these pages, may
here and there find considerations of real weight and importance,
which will solve imaginary difficulties and supply an answer to real
objections. Although this book is not mainly controversial, and would,
4 PREFACE.
had it been intended as a contribution to polemical literature, have
been written in a very different manner, I do not believe that it will
prove wholly valueless to any honest doubter who reads it in a can-
did and uncontemptuous spirit. Hundreds of critics, for instance,
have impugned the authority of the Gospels on the score of the real
or supposed contradictions to be found in them. I am of course
familiar with such objections, which may be found in all sorts of
books, from Strauss's Leben Jesu and Renan's Vie de Jesus, down
to Sir R. Hanson's Jesus of History, and the English Life of Jesus,
by Mr. Thomas Scott. But, while I have never consciously evaded
a distinct and formidable difficulty, I have constantly endeavored to
show by the mere silent course of the narrative itself 'that many of
these objections are by no means insuperable, and that many more
are unfairly captious or altogether fantastic.
5. If there are questions wider and deeper than the minutia of
criticism, into which I have not fully and directly entered, it is not
either from having neglected to weigh the arguments respecting
them, or from any unwillingness to state the reasons why, in common
with tens of thousands who are abler and wiser than myself, I can
still say respecting every fundamental doctrine of the Christian faith,
MANET IMMOTA FIDES.1 Writing as a believer to believers, as a Chris-
tian to Christians, surely, after nearly nineteen centuries of Chris-
tianity, any one may be allowed to rest a fact of the Life of Jesus on
the testimony of St. John without stopping to write a volume on the
authenticity of the Fourth Gospel; or may narrate one of the Gospel
miracles without deeming it necessary to answer all the arguments
which have been urged against the possibility of the supernatural.
After the long labors, the powerful reasoning, and the perfect his-
torical candor with which this subject has been treated by a host of
apologists, it is surely as needless as it is impossible to lay again, on
every possible occasion, the very lowest foundations of our faith. As
regards St. John, therefore, I have contented myself with the merest
and briefest summary of some of the evidence which to me still
seems adequate to prove that he was the author of the Gospel which
passes by his name,* and minuter indications tending to strengthen
* See pp. 128, 129, passim.
PREFACE. 5
that conviction will be found scattered throughout the book. It
would indeed be hypocrisy in me to say with Ewald that "every
argument, from every quarter to which we can look, every trace and
record, combine together to render any serious doubt upon the ques-
tion absolutely impossible ; " but I do say that, after the fairest and
fullest consideration which I have been able to give to a question
beset with difficulties, the arguments in favor of the Johannine
authorship seem to me to be immensely preponderant.
Nor have I left the subject of the credibility of miracles and the
general authenticity of the Gospel narratives entirely untouched,
although there was the less need for my entering fully upon those
questions in the following pages from my having already stated
elsewhere, to the best of my 'ability, the grounds of my belief.
The same remark. applies to the yet more solemn truth of the
Divinity of Christ. Thatnot indeed as surrounded with all the
recondite inquiries about the perixwj e]nhnqrwphsen i!na h[mei?j qeopoihqw?men.6--ATHAN., De Incarn., p.
54 (Opp. i. 108).
ONE mile from Bethlehem is a little plain, in which, under a grove
of olives, stands the hare and neglected chapel known by the name
of "the Angel to the Shepherds." 1 It is built over the traditional
site of the fields where, in the beautiful language of St. Luke more
exquisite than any idyl to Christian ears "there were shepherds
keeping watch over their flock by night, when, lo, the angel of the
Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord2 shone round about
them," and to their happy ears were uttered the good tidings of great
joy, that unto them was born that day in the city of David a Saviour,
which was Christ the Lord.
The associations of our Lord's nativity were all of the humblest
character, and the very scenery of His birth place was connected with
memories of poverty and toil. On that night, indeed, it seemed as
though the heavens must burst to disclose their radiant minstrelsies;
and the stars, and the feeding sheep, and the "light and sound in the
1 Angelus ad Pastores." Near this spot once stood a tower called Migdal
Eder, or "Tower of the Flock" (Gen. xxxv. 21). The present rude chapel is,
perhaps, a mere fragment of a church built over the spot by Helena. (See Cas-
par, Chronologisch-Geographische Einleitung, p. 57.) The prophet Micah (iv. 8;
v. 2) had looked to Migdal Eder with Messianic hopes; and St. Jerome (De Loc.
Hebr.), writing with views of prophecy which were more current in the ancient
than in the modern Church, ventures to say "that by its very name it fore-signi-
ned by a sort of prophecy the shepherds at the birth of the Lord."
2 By do not a]natlh>, is used for "the east," in Matt, ii. 1); but this would
seem to require au]tou?, and does not well suit verse 9.
2 Jos. Antt. xvi. 7, 1. On seizing the throne, with the support of the Romans,
and specially of Antony, more than thirty years before (A. U. C. 717), Herod
(whose mother, Cypros, was an Arabian, and his father, Antipater, an Iduman)
had been distinctly informed by the Sanhedrin that, in obedience to Deut. xvii.
15, they could not accept a stranger for their king. This faithfulness cost a great
many of them their lives. (See Jos. Antt. xiv. 9, 4; xv. 1, &c., and rabbinic
authorities quoted by Sepp.) The political and personal relations of Herod were
evidently well adapted for the furtherance of a new religion. The rulers of the
Jews, since the Captivity, had been Persian between B.C. 536-332; Egypto-
Greek and Syro-Greek between B.C. 332142; Asmonan and independent
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 49
despised Ishmael and the hated Esau, heard the tidings with a terror
and indignation which it was hard to dissimulate. The grandson of
one who, as was believed, had been a mere servitor in a temple at
Ascalon, and who in his youth had been carried off by Edomite brig-
ands, he well knew how worthless were his pretensions to an historic
throne which he held solely by successful adventure. But his craft
equalled his cruelty, and finding that all Jerusalem shared his sus-
pense, he summoned to his palace the leading priests and theologians
of the Jewsperhaps the relics of that Sanhedrin which he had
long reduced to a despicable shadow to inquire of them where the
Messiah1 was to be born. He received the ready and confident
answer that Bethlehem was the town indicated for that honor by the
prophecy of Micah.2 Concealing, therefore, his desperate intention,
the dispatched the wise men to Bethlehem, bidding them to let him
know as soon as they had found the child, that he too might come
and do him reverence.
Before continuing the narrative, let us pause to inquire who these
Eastern wanderers were, and what can be discovered respecting their
mysterious mission.
between B. C. 14263; and under Roman influences since the conquest of Jerusa-
lem by Pompey, B.C. 63. Under Herod (from B.C. 37 to the birth of Christ)
the government might fairly be called cosmopolitan. In him the East and the
West were united. By birth an Edomite on the father's side, and an Ishmaelite
on the mother's, he represented a third great division of the Semitic race by his
nominal adoption of the Jewish religion. Yet his life was entirely moulded by
conceptions borrowed from the two great Aryan races of the ancient world; his
conceptions of policy and government were entirely Roman; his ideal of life and
enjoyment entirely Greek. And, in addition to this, he was surrounded by a
body-guard of barbarian mercenaries. At no previous or subsequent period could
a world-religion have been more easily preached than it was among the hetero-
geneous elements which were brought together by his singular tyranny. (Guder,
Knig Hoerodes der Grosse, i.) His astuteness, however, had early taught him that
his one best security was to truckle to the all-powerful Romans (oi[ paj, "the Anointed." "Christ" in the Gospels, even when without the
article in Greek, which is only in four passages, is almost without exception
(John xvii. 3), an appellative and not a proper name ("non proprium nomen est,
sed nuncupatio potestatis et regni," 23 Lact. Instt. Div. iv. 7). (See Lightfoot on
Revision, 100.)
2 Micah v. 2; cf. John vii. 42. The latter passage shows how familiarly this
prophecy was known to the people. The Jewish authorities quote the text
loosely, but give the sense. (See Turpie, The Old Test. in the New, p. 189.) The
version of Gen. xlix. 27 in the Targum of Onkelos is, "The Shechniah shall
dwell in the land of Benjamin." (Gfrrer, Jahrh. d. Heils, i. 55.)
50 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
The name "Magi," by which they are called in the Greek of St.
Matthew, is perfectly vague. It meant originally a sect of Median
and Persian scholars; it was subsequently applied (as in Acts xiii. 6)
to pretended astrologers, or Oriental soothsayers. Such characters
were well known to antiquity, under the name of Chaldans, and
their visits were by no means unfamiliar even to the Western
nations. Diogenes Laertius reports to as a story of Aristotle, that a
Syrian mage had predicted to Socrates that he would die a violent
death;1 and Seneca informs as that magi, "qui forte Athenis
erant," 24 had visited the tomb of Plato, and had there offered incense
to him as a divine being.2 There is nothing but a mass of confused
and contradictory traditions to throw any light either on their rank,
their country, their number, or their names. The tradition which
makes them kings was probably founded on the prophecy of Isaiah
(lx. 3): "And the Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the
brightness of thy rising." The fancy that they were Arabians may
have arisen from the fact that myrrh and frankincense are Arabian
products, joined to the passage in Ps. lxxii. 10, "The kings of Thar-
shish and of the isles shall give presents; the kings of Arabia and
Saba shall bring gifts." 3
There was a double tradition as to their number. Augustine and
Chrysostom say that there were twelve, but the common belief, aris-
ing perhaps from the triple gifts, is that they were three in number.4
The Venerable Bede even gives us their names, their country, and
their personal appearance. Melchior was an old man with white hair
and long beard; Caspar, a ruddy and beardless youth; Balthasar,
swarthy and in the prime of life.5 We are further informed by tra-
dition that Melchior was a descendant of Shem, Caspar of Ham, and
Balthasar of Japheth. Thus they are made representatives of the
three periods of life, and the three divisions of the globe; and value-
less as such fictions may be for direct historical purposes, they have
been rendered interesting by their influence on the most splendid
productions of religious art.6 The skulls of these three kings, each
1 Diog. Laert. ii. 45.
2 Sen. Ep. 58.
3 In the original xbAw;, i.e. Arabia Felix. One MS. of the Protevangelium makes them come from Persia (e]k Persidoj); Theodoret calls them Chaldans; Hilary, thiopians; some more recent writers make them Indians. (See Hofmann, p. 127.)
4 See all the authorities for these legends or fancies quoted with immense learn-
ing and accuracy by Hofmann.
5 Bede, Opp. iii. 649.
6 The art student will at once recall the glorious pictures of Paul Veronese,
Giovanni Bellini, &c.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 51
circled with its crown of jewelled gold, are still exhibited among the
relics in the cathedral at Cologne.1
It is, however, more immediately to our purpose to ascertain the
causes of their memorable journey.
We are informed by Tacitus, by Suetonius, and by Josephus,2 that
there prevailed throughout the entire East at this time an intense
conviction, derived from ancient prophecies, that ere long a powerful
monarch would arise in Juda, and gain dominion over the world.
It has, indeed, been conjectured that the Roman historians may
simply be echoing an assertion, for which Josephus was in reality
their sole authority; but even if we accept this uncertain supposition,
there is still ample proof, both in Jewish and in Pagan writings, that
a guilty and weary world was dimly expecting the advent of its
Deliverer. "The dew of blessing falls not on us, and our fruits have
no taste," exclaimed Rabban Simeon, the son of Gamaliel; and the
expression might stun up much of the literature of an age which was,
as Niebuhr says, "effete with the drunkenness of crime." The splen-
did vaticination in the fourth Eclogue of Virgil proves the intensity
of the feeling, and has long been reckoned among the "unconscious
prophecies of heathendom."
There is, therefore, nothing extraordinary in the fact that these
Eastern magi should have bent their steps to Jerusalem, especially
if there were any circumstances to awaken in the East a more imme-
diate conviction that this wide-spread expectation was on the point of
fulfilment. If they were disciples of Zoroaster, they would see in
the Infant King the future conqueror of Ahriman, the destined Lord
of all the World. The story of their journey has indeed been set
down with contemptuous confidence as a mere poetic myth; but
though its actual historic verity must rest on the testimony of the
Evangelist alone, there are many facts which enable us to see that in
its main outlines it involves nothing either impossible or even
improbable.
1 They were said to have been found by Bishop Reinald in the twelfth century.
2 "Pluribus persuasio inerat, antiquis sacerdotum libris contineri, fore ut vales-
ceret oriens, et e Judaea profecti rerum potirentur" 25 (Tac. Hist. v. 13). "Percre-
buerat oriente toto vetus et constans opinio esse in fatis, ut eo tempore Judaea pro-
fecti reruns potirentur,26 (Suet. Vesp. 4). xrhsmo>j . . . w[j kata> to>n kairo>n
e]kei?non a]po> th?j xwn oi]ki tou?ton to>n xroj a]nh>r [didaj me>n tw?n ]Ioudaij de> kai>
a]po> tou? [Ellhnikou? e]phgaj, ou$toj h#n] Kai> au]to>n e]n-
dei i@dia).
and His own people (oi[ i@dioi) received Him not."
86 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
CHAPTER VII.
THE HOME AT NAZARETH.
Au]ca to> koino>n a[pa Pneu?ma e]kban
ei]j th kairou?. Much that I have here said is confirmed by a
passage in Greg. M. Hom. i. 16 (Wordsw. on Matt. iv. 1), "Tentari Christus potuit,
sed ejus mentem peccati delectatio non momordit. Ideo omnis diabolica illa
tentatio foris non intus fuit." 89 And yet in spite of these and many more saintly
and erudite justifications of such a view from the writings of theologians in all
ages, the violent and prejudiced ignorance of modern a]orasi nhstein a@rxonta th?j e]cousi from e]k in this sense is untenable
136 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
band. Eager to communicate the rich discovery which he had made,
Philip sought out his friend Nathanael, exercising thereby the divin-
est prerogative of friendship, which consists in the communication to
others of all that we have ourselves experienced to be most divine.
Nathanael, in the list of apostles, is generally, and almost indubita-
bly, identified with Bartholomew; for Bartholomew is less a name
than a designation "Bar-Tolmai, the son of Tolmai;" and while
Nathanael is only in one other place mentioned under this name
(John xxi. 2), Bartholomew (of whom, on any other supposition, we
should know nothing whatever) is, in the list of apostles, almost
invariably associated with Philip.1 As his home was at Cana of Gal-
ilee, the son of Tolmai might easily have become acquainted with the
young fishermen of Gennesareth. And yet so deep was the retire-
ment in which up to this time Jesus had lived His life, that though
Nathanael knew Philip, he knew nothing of Christ. The simple
mind of Philip seemed to find a pleasure in contrasting the grandeur
of His office with the meanness of His birth: "We have found Him
of whom Moses in the Law, and the Prophets, did write;" whom
think you? a young Herodian prince? a young Asmonaean
priest? some burning light from the schools of Shammai or Hillel?
some passionate young Emir from the followers of Judas of Gamala?
no, but "Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph."
Nathanael seems to have felt the contrast. He caught at the local
designation. It may be, as legend says, that he was a man of higher
position than the rest of the Apostles.2 It has been usually consid-
ered that his answer was proverbial; but perhaps it was a passing
allusion to the word nazora, " despicable; or it may merely have
implied "Nazareth, that obscure and ill-reputed town in its little
untrodden valleycan anything good come from thence?" The
answer is in the same words which our Lord had addressed to John
and Andrew. Philip was an apt scholar, and he too said, "Come
and see."
To-day, too, that question "Can any good thing come out of
Nazareth? " is often repeated, and the one sufficient answer
1 Some make Tolmai a mere abbreviation of Ptolomaeus. On the identity of
Nathanael with Bartholomew, see Ewald, Gesch. Christus, 327. Donaldson (Jashar,
p. 9) thinks that Nathanael was Philip's brother.
2"Non Petro viii piscatori Bartholomaeus nobilis anteponitur"'111 (Jerome, Ep.
ad Eustoch.). Hence he is usually represented in mediaeval art clothed in a purple
mantle, adorned with precious stone; but John xxi. 2 is alone sufficient to inval-
idate the tradition.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 137
almost the only possible answer is now, as it then was, "Come and
see." Then it meant, come and see One who speaks as never man
spake; come and see One who, though He be but the Carpenter of
Nazareth, yet overawes the souls of all who approach Him seem-
ing by His mere presence to reveal the secrets of all hearts, yet drawing
to Him even the most sinful with a sense of yearning love; come
and see One from whom there seems to breathe forth the irresistible
charm of a sinless purity, the unapproachable beauty of a Divine life.
"Come and see," said Philip, convinced in his simple faithful heart
that to see Jesus was to know Him, and to know was to love, and to
love was to adore. In this sense, indeed, we can say "come and see "
no longer; for since the blue heavens closed on the visions which
were vouchsafed to St. Stephen and St. Paul, His earthly form has
been visible no more. But there is another sense, no less powerful
for conviction, in which it still suffices to say, in answer to all doubts,
"Come and see." Come and see a dying world revivified, a decrepit
world regenerated, an aged world rejuvenescent; come and see the
darkness illuminated, the despair dispelled; come and see tenderness
brought into the cell of the imprisoned felon, and liberty to the
fettered slave; come and see the poor, and the ignorant, and the
many, emancipated for ever from the intolerable thraldom of the
rich, the learned, and the few; come and see hospitals and orphan-
ages rising in their permanent mercy beside the crumbling ruins
of colossal amphitheatres which once reeked with human blood
come and see the obscene symbols of an universal degradation
obliterated indignantly from the purified abodes; come and see
the dens of lust and tyranny transformed into sweet and happy
homes, defiant atheists into believing Christians, rebels into child-
ren, and pagans into saints. Ay, come and see the majestic acts of
one great drama continued through nineteen Christian centuries;
and as you see them all tending to one great development, long
predetermined in the Council of the Divine Willas you learn
in reverent humility that even apparent Chance is in reality the
daughter of Forethought, as well as, for those who thus recognize her
nature, the sister of Order and Persuasion1 as you hear the voice
of your Saviour searching, with the loving accents of a compassion
1 [Tu kai> Promaqein.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 147
but fresh confirmation that we are reading the words of soberness and
truth.
A miracle is a miracle, and we see no possible advantage in trying
to understand the means by which it was wrought. In accepting the
evidence for it and it is for each man to be fully persuaded in his
own mind, and to accept or to reject at his pleasure, perhaps even
it may prove to be at his peril we are avowedly accepting the evi-
dence for something which transcends, though it by no means neces-
sarily supersedes, the ordinary laws by which Nature works. What
is gained in what single respect does the miracle become, so to
speak, easier or more comprehensible __ by supposing, with Olshausen,
that we have here only an accelerated process of nature; or with
Neander (apparently), that the water was magnetized; or with Lange
(apparently), that the guests were in a state of supernatural exalta-
tion?1 Let those who find it intellectually possible, or spiritually
advantageous, freely avail themselves of such hypotheses if they see
their way to do so: to us they seem, not " irreverent," not " ration-
alistic," not "dangerous," but simply embarrassing and needless. To
denounce them as unfaithful concessions to the spirit of scepticism
may suit the exigencies of a violent and Pharisaic theology, but is
unworthy of that calm charity which should be the fairest fruit of
Christian faith. In matters of faith it ought to be to every one of
us "a very small thing to be judged of you or of man's judgment;"
we ought to believe, or disbelieve, or modify belief, with sole refer-
ence to that which, in our hearts and consciences, we feel to be the
Will of God; and it is by His judgment, and by His alone, that we
should care to stand or to fall. ''We as little claim a right to scathe
the rejector of miracles by abuse and anathema, as we admit his right
to sneer at us for imbecility or hypocrisy. Jesus has taught to all
men, whether they accept or reject Him, the lessons of charity and
sweetness; and what the believer and unbeliever alike can do, is
1Olshausen, Comment. on the Gospels, iii. 368, following Augustine, " Ipse fecit
vinum in nuptiis qui omni anno hoc facit in vitibus.126 Neander, Life of Jesus
Christ, E. Tr., p. 176. It is to be regretted that this "acceleration" hypothesis
has been received with favor by some eminent English divines; Nature alone, as
a friend remarks, will never, whatever time you give her, make thirty imperial
gallons of wine without at least ten pounds avoirdupois of carbon. Ewald beau-
tifully, but with a perhaps intentional vagueness, says, "Wir warden uns diesen
weiu der sett jener zeit auch uns noch immer fliessen kann, selbst libel verwits-
sern, wenn wir hier in groben sinne fragen wollten wiedenn aus blossem wasser
im augenblicke wein werden kbnne : soli denn das wasser im besten sinne des
wortes nicht liberall auch jezt noch zu weine werden wo Sein geist in voller kraft
thittig ist?"127 (Gesch. Christ. p. 329).
148 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
calmly, temperately, justly, and with perfect and solemn sincerity
knowing how deep are the feelings involved, and how vast the issues
at stake between us to state the reason for the belief that is in
him. And this being so, I would say that if we once understand
that the word Nature has little or no meaning unless it be made to
include the idea of its Author; if we once realize the fact, which all
science teaches us, that the very simplest and most elementary oper-
ation of the laws of Nature is infinitely beyond the comprehension
of our most exalted intelligence; if we once believe that the Divine
Providence of God is no far-off abstraction, but a living and loving
care over the lives of man; lastly, if we once believe that Christ was
the only-begotten Son of God, the Word of God who came to reveal
and declare His Father to mankind, then there is nothing in any
Gospel miracle to shock our faith: we shall regard the miracles of
Christ as resulting from the fact of His Being and His mission, no
less naturally and inevitably than the rays of light stream outwards
from the sun. They were, to use the favorite expression of St. John,
not merely "portents" (te pa ]Ioudai gunxaiko>j e]lan of Matt. iv. 13 =paralipw>n.] Possibly, however
the particle may refer (as I have stated in the text) to a thought unexpressed in
the writer's mind--viz., either that the reason why he had declared himself first in Judea, was that a prophet has no honor in his own country; or that "He was
not unaware of the opposition which would await Him, for He knew that a
prophet is least honored among his own.' The ga>r may therefore point mentally
to the very events which St. John omits, but which are narrated or alluded to in
Luke iv. 1430. "The causal connections in the Fourth Gospel," says Mr. San-
day (p. 98) "are often perplexing." Origin's solution that by ]Idij, is
182 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
It was not the object of St. John to dwell on the ministry in Gal-
ilee, which had been already narrated by the Synoptists; accordingly
it is from St. Luke that we receive the fullest account of our Lord's
first public act in His native town.1
It appears that Jesus did not go direct from Sychar to Nazareth.
On His way (unless we take Luke iv. 15 for a general and unchro-
nological reference) He taught continuously, and with general admira-
tion and acceptance, in the synagogues of Galilee.2 In this way He
arrived at Nazareth, and according to His usual custom, for He had
doubtless been a silent worshipper in that humble place Sabbath after
Sabbath from boyhood upwards, He entered into the synagogue on
the Sabbath day.
There was but one synagogue in the little town,3 and prob-
ably it resembled in all respects, except in its humbler aspect and
materials, the synagogues of which we see the ruins at Tell Hun
and Irbid. It was simply a rectangular hall, with a pillared por-
tico of Grecian architecture, of which the further extremity (where
the "sanctuary" was placed) usually pointed towards Jerusalem,
which, since the time of Solomon, had always been the Kibleh -- i. e.,
the consecrated direction of a Jew's worship, as Mecca is of a
Mohammedan's. In wealthier places it was built of white marble,
and sculptured on the outside in alto-relievo, with rude ornaments of
vine-leaves and grapes, or the budding rod and pot of manna.4 On
meant Judea, is wholly unsatisfactory. That Christ did not twice preach at Naza-
reth under circumstances so closely analogous, I regard as certain, and that is my
reason for considering that Matt. xiii. 5358; Mark vi. 1-6, refer to this same
event, narrated out of its proper order.
1 Luke iv. 1430. There may possibly (but not certainly) be some unchronolog-
ical reminiscences of this visit to Nazareth in Matt. xiii. 5458 ; Mark vi. 26.
2Luke iv. 15, e]din sunagwgh>n.
4 These emblems were found on the broken slab of the architrave which once
stood over the door of the synagogue at Capernaum (Tell Hum). They have no
pretence to architectural beauty; " le gout en est assez mesquin152 (Renan, Vie
de Jesus, p. 82, ed. pop.). For the reason of the kibleh, see 1 Kings viii. 29; Dan.
vi. 10. The orientation does not now seem to be very carefully attended to, for
Mr. Monro tells me that in Algiers the reader's pulpit in the synagogues may
look north, east, or south only not west.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST 183
entering there were seats on one side for the men; on the other,
behind a lattice, were seated the women, shrouded in their long veils.
At one end was the tebhah or ark of painted wood, which contained
the sacred scriptures; and at one side was the bma, or elevated seat
for the reader or preacher.1 Clergy, properly speaking, there were
none, but in the chief seats were the ten or more batlanm, "men of
leisure," or leading elders; 2 and pre-eminent among these the chief
of the synagogue,3 or rosh hak-keneseth. Inferior in rank to these
were the chazzan,4 or clerk, whose duty it was to keep the sacred
books; the shelach, corresponding to our sacristan or verger; and
the parnasim, or shepherds, who in some respects acted as deacons.
The service of the synagogue was not unlike our own. After the
prayers5 two lessons were always read, one from the Law called parashah, and one from the Prophets called haphtarah; as there
were no ordained ministers to conduct the services for the office of
priests and Levites at Jerusalem was wholly different these les-
sons might not only be read by any competent person who received
permission from the rosh hak-keneseth, but he was even at liberty to
add his own midrash, or comment.6
The reading of the parashah, or lesson from the Pentateuch, was
apparently over7 when Jesus ascended the steps of the bma. Recog-
nizing his claim to perform the honorable function of a maphtir or
reader, the chazzin drew aside the silk curtain of the painted ark
which contained the sacred manuscripts, and handed Him the megillah
or roll of the Prophet Isaiah, which contained the haphtarah of the
day.8 Our Lord unrolled the volume, and found the well-known
1The Jews borrowed the word hmyb from the Greek (but compare Neh. viii. 4;
ix. 4).
2presbuj) believed in Christ with his whole house, in con-
sequence of the miracle now wrought, it has been conjectured with
some probability that it was none other than Chuza himself.
The imperious urgency of his request, a request which appear at
first to have had but little root in spiritual conviction, needed a
momentary check. It was necessary for Jesus to show that He was
no mere hakeem, no mere benevolent physician, ready at any time, to
work local cures, and to place His supernatural powers at the beck
and call of any sufferer who might come to Him as a desperate
resource. He at once rebuked the spirit which demanded mere signs
and prodigies as the sole possible ground of faith.3 But yielding to
the father's passionate earnestness, He dismissed him with the assur-
1In the general obscurity of the chronology, it seems clear (as we have said
before) that by this time John had been cast into prison (Matt. iv. 12, 13; Mark i.
14 ; Luke iii. 20: Comparing these passages of the Synoptists with John iii. 24;
iv. 45. and following the order of events given in the text, we may perhaps
assume (though this is not absolutely necessary, v. spur., p. 181, 1n.) that Galilee
here means Northern Galilee, or Galilee proper.
2Acts xiii. 1; cf. Luke viii. 3.
3 tej qaddai?oj. In Mark iii. 18,
the reading also varies, but the true reading is probably qaddai?oj, who, then, in
both lists occupies the tenth place. In St. Luke's list, the corresponding name,
though it occupies the eleventh place, is " Judas of James." The attempt to
make Thaddaeus mean, the same as Lebbaeus is a mistake, for the Aram. jTa (Hebr.
dwa) means mamma, not pectus or cor (Lam. iv. 3, &co.). Ewald identifies Lebbaeus
-with Levi (Mark ii. 14), where Origen (c. Cels. ii. 62) seems to have read Lebhoj and Leui~j (Strom. iv. 9, 73). But the whole subject is
involved in almost incredible obscurity. The lists of the Apostles as given by
the three Evangelists and in the Acts are as follow :
MATT. X. 24. MARK iii. 16-19 LUKE vi. 14-16 ACTS i. 13
1.Simon Simon Simon Peter
2.Andrew James Andrew James
3.James John James John
4.John Andrew John Andrew
5.Philip Philip Philip Philip
6.Bartholomew Bartholomew Bartholomew Thomas
7.Thomas Matthew Matthew Bartholomew
8.Matthew Thomas Thomas Matthew
9.James of Alphaeus James of Alphaeus James of Alphaeus James of Alphaeus
10.Lebbaeus Thaddaeus Simon Zelotes Simon Zelotes
11.Simon o[ Kananai?oj Simon o[ Kananai?oj Jude of James Jude of James
12.Judas Iscariot Judas Isacriot Judas Isacriot
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 205
of " Judas, not Iscariot," which is mentioned by St. John.1 Simon is
only known by his surnames of Zelotes, "the Zealot," or "the Canaan-
ite"names which are identical in meaning, and which mark him
out as having once belonged to the wild and furious followers of
Judas of Giscala.2 The Greek names of Philip and Andrew, together
with the fact that it was to Philip that the Greeks applied who
wished for an interview with our Lord, and his reference of the
request to Andrew, may possibly point to some connection on their
part with the Hellenists; but, besides their first call, almost nothing
is recorded about them; and the same remark applies to Nathanael
and to Matthew. Of Thomas, called also Didymus, or "the Twin,"
which is only a Greek version of his Hebrew name, we catch several
interesting glimpses, which show a well-marked character, naive and
simple, but at the same time ardent and generous; ready to die, yet
slow to believe. Of Judas, the man of Kerioth,4 perhaps the only
Jew in the Apostolic band, we shall have sad occasion to speak here-
1John xiv. 22.
2 hxAn;qi means " zeal." The true reading of Matt. x. 4; Mark iii. 18 is Kana-
nai?oj, and the form of the word indicates the member of a sect (Lightfoot,
Revision, p. 138). Zhlwtai> para> ]Ioudaij
to>n dida and nomodidan to to>n o@xlon, which is impossible] to eat bread."
2 Acts xxvi. 24. Cf. 2 Cor. v. 13.
3 John x. 20.
226 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
fine genius," was the sneering allusion of Pope Leo X. to Luther.
"What crackbrained fanatics," observed the fine gentlemen of the
eighteenth century when they spoke of Wesley and Whitefield.
Similar, though not so coarse, was the thought which filled the mind
of Christ's wondering relatives, when they heard of this sudden and
amazing activity after the calm seclusion of thirty unknown and
unnoticed years. As yet they were out of sympathy with Him; they
knew Him not, did not fully believe in Him; they said, "He is beside
Himself." It was needful that they should be henceforth taught by
several decisive proofs that He was not of them; that this was no
longer the Carpenter, the brother of James and Joses and Judas and
Simon, but the Son of God, the Saviour of the world.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 227
CHAPTER XX.
JESUS AT NAIN.
"Shall the dead arise, and praise thee?" Ps. 1xxxviii. 10.
IF the common reading in the text of St. Luke (vii. 11) be right,
it was on the very day after these events that our Lord took His way
from Capernaum to Nain.1 Possiblyfor, in the dim uncertainties
of the chronological sequence, much scope must be left to pure con-
jecture the incident of His having touched the leper may have
tended to hasten His temporary departure from Capernaum by the
continents which- the act involved.
Nain now a squalid and miserable village is about twenty-five
miles from Capernaum, and lies on the north-west slope of Jebel
el-Duhy, or Little Hermon. The name (which it still retains) means
"fair," and its situation near Endor nestling picturesquely on the
hill-slopes of the graceful mountain, and full in view of Tabor and
the heights of Zebulonjustifies the flattering title. Starting, as
Orientals always do, early in the cool morning hours, Jesus, in all
probability, sailed to the southern end of the lake, and then passed
down the Jordan valley, to the spot where the wadies of the Esdrae-
lon slope down to it; from which point, leaving Mount Tabor on the
right hand, and Endor on the left, He might easily halve arrived at
the little village soon after noon.
At this bright and welcome period of His ministry, He was usually
accompanied, not only by His disciples, but also by rejoicing and
adoring crowds. And as this glad procession, so full of their high
hopes and too-often-erring beliefs about the coming King, was climb-
ing the narrow and rocky ascent which leads to the gate of Nain,
they were met by another and a sad procession issuing through it to
1 The narratives of this chapter are mostly peculiar to St. Luke (vii. 11 50).
The message of St. John Baptist's disciples is, however, also related by St. Mat-
thew (xi. 219). e]n t^? e[ch?j (sc. h[men oi]ki tou>j po194). It is curious that no mention
is made of the wife of Peter or of the other married Apostles (1 Cor. ix. 5). Of
Susanna here mentioned by St. Luke, absolutely nothing further is known.
Mary, the mother of James the Less, was another of these ministering women;
and it is an illustration of the extreme paucity of names among the Jews, and the
confusion that results from it, that there are perhaps as many as seven Marys in
the Gospel History alone. (See a fragment attributed to Papias in Routh, Relig.
Sacr. i. 16; Wordsworth on Matt. xii. 47; Ewald, Gesch. Christus, p. 401, 3rd
edit.) The fact that they were ministering to Him of their substance shows,
among other circumstances, that there was no absolute community of goods in the
little band.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 245
Salome, the wife of the fisherman Zabdia; and one of still higher
wealth and position, Joanna, the wife of Chuza, steward of Herod
Antiptas.1
But He whom all eyes seek is in the very centre of the throng;
and though at His right is Peter of Bethsaida, and at His left the
more youthful figure of John, yet every glance is absorbed by Him
alone.
He is not clothed in soft raiment of byssus or purple, like Herod's
courtiers, or the luxurious friends of the Procurator Pilate: He does
not wear the white ephod of the Levite, or the sweeping robes of the
Scribe. There are not, on His arm and forehead, the tephillin or
phylacteries,2 which the Pharisees make so broad; and though there
is at each corner of His dress the fringe and blue riband which the
Law enjoins, it is not worn of the ostentatious size affected by those
who wished to parade the scrupulousness of their obedience. He is
in the ordinary dress of his time and country. He is not bareheaded
as painters usually represent Him -- for to move about bareheaded
in the Syrian sunlight is impossible,3 but a white keffiyeh, such as is
worn to this day, covers his hair, fastened by an aghal or fillet round
the top of the head, and falling back over the neck and shoulders.
A large blue outer robe or talith, pure and clean, but of the sim-
plest materials, covers His entire person, and only shows occasional
1 The Blessed Virgin was not one of this ministering company. The reason for
her absence from it is not given. It is not impossible that a certain amount of
constraint was put, upon her by the "brethren of the Lord," who on three distinct
occasions (Matt. xii. 46; Mark iii. 21; John vii. 3: see pp. 227, 255) interfered
with Jesus, and on one of those occasions seem to have worked upon the suscep-
tibilities even of His mother. Meanwhile her absence from Christ's journeyings
is an incidental proof of the deep seclusion in which she evidently liveda seclu-
sion sufficiently indicated by the silence of the Gospels respecting her, and which
accords most accurately with the incidental notices of her humble and meditative
character.
2 We cannot believe that Christ sanctioned by His own practice at any rate,
in manhood the idle and superstitions custom of wearing those little text-boxes,
which had in all probability originated merely iii an unintelligent and slavishly
literal interpretation of a metaphorical command. For further information about
the tephillin, I may refer the reader to my article on "Frontlets" in Dr. Smith's
Dict. of the Bible, or to the still fuller article by Dr. Ginsburg in Kitto's Bibl.
Cyclop. s. v. "Phylacteries."
3 This must surely have occurred to every one after a moment's reflection, yet,
strange to say, I cannot recall one of the great works of mediaeval art in which the
Saviour is depicted with covered head. The ordinary articles of dress now are
the kumis, or inner shirt; gumbur, or kaftan, open gown of silk or cotton, overlap-
ping in front; zannar, or girdle; abba, or abaiyeh, a strong, coarse cloak, in which
the wearer usually sleeps; and tarbush, or fez. (See Thomson, Land and Book,
I., ch. ix.)
246 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
glimpses of the ketoneth, a seamless woolen tunic of the ordinary
striped texture, so common in the East, which is confined by a gir-
dle round the waist, and which clothes Him from the neck almost
down to the sandalled feet. But the simple garments do not conceal
the King; and though in His bearing there is nothing of the self-
conscious haughtiness of the Rabbi, yet, in its natural nobleness and
unsought grace, it is such as instantly suffices to check every rude
tongue and overawe every wicked thought.
And His aspect?1 He is a man of middle size, and of about thirty
years of age, on whose face the purity and charm of youth are min-
gled with the thoughtfulness and dignity of manhood. His hair,
which legend has compared to the color of wine, is parted in the
middle of the forehead, and flows down over the neck. His features
are paler and of a more Hellenic type than the weather-bronzed and
olive-tinted faces of the hardy fishermen who are His Apostles; but
though those features have evidently been marred by sorrow
though it is manifest that those eyes, whose pure and indescribable
glance seems to read the very secrets of the heart, have often glowed
through tears yet no man, whose soul has not been eaten away by sin
and selfishness, can look unmoved and unawed on the divine expres-
sion of that calm and patient face. Yes, this is He of whom Moses
and the Prophets did speak Jesus of Nazareth, the Son of Mary,
and the Son of David; and the Son of Man, and the Son of God.
Our eyes have seen the King in His beauty. We have beheld His
glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace
and truth. And having seen Him we can well understand how,
while He spake, a certain woman of the company lifted up her voice
and said, "Blessed is the womb that bare Thee, and the paps that
Thou hast sucked!" "Yea, rather blessed," He answered, in words
full of deep sweet mystery, "are they that hear the word of God
and keep it."
One or two facts and features of His life on earth may here be
fitly introduced.
1. First, then, it was a life of poverty. Some of the old Messi-
anic prophecies, which the Jews in general so little understood,
had already indicated His voluntary submission to a humble lot.2
1 See Excursus V., "On the Traditional Descriptions of the Appearance of
Jesus."
2 It seems impossible to trace the date or origin of the later Jewish conception
of a suffering Messias, the descendant of Joseph or Ephraim, which is found in
Zohar, Bab. Targ. Cant. iv. 5, &c. It is clear that the nation had not realized the
point of view which was familiar to the Apostles after Pentecost (see Acts iii. 18;
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 247
Though He were rich, yet for our sakes He became poor." He
was born in the cavern-stable, cradled in the manger. His mother
offered for her purification the doves which were the offering of the
poor. The flight into Egypt was doubtless accompanied with many
a hardship, and when He returned it was to live as a carpenter, and
the son of a carpenter, in the despised provincial village. It was as
a poor wandering teacher, possessing nothing, that He travelled
through the land. With the words, "Blessed are the poor in spirit,"
He began His Sermon on the Mount; and He made it the chief
sign of the opening dispensation that to the poor the Gospel was
being preached. It was a fit comment on this His poverty, that after
but three short years of His public ministry He was sold by one of
His own Apostles for the thirty shekels which were the price of the
meanest slave.
2. And the simplicity of His life corresponded to its external pov-
erty. Never in His life did He possess a roof which He could call
His own. The humble abode at Nazareth was but shared with
numerous brothers and sisters. Even the house in Capernaum which
He so often visited was not His own possession; it was lent Him by
one of His disciples. There never belonged to Him one foot's-breadth
of the earth which He came to save. We never hear that any of the
beggars, who in every Eastern country are so numerous and so impor-
tunate, asked Him for alms. Had they done so He might have
answered with Peter, "Silver and gold have I none, but such as I
have that give I thee." His food was of the plainest. He was ready
indeed, when invited, to join in the innocent social happiness of
Simons, or Levi's, or Martha's, or the bridegroom of Cana's feast;
but His ordinary food was as simple as that of the humblest peasant
bread of the coarsest quality,1 fish caught in the lake and broiled
in embers on the shore, and sometimes a piece of honeycomb, prob-
ably of the wild honey which was then found abundantly in Pales-
tine. Small indeed was the gossamer thread of semblance on which
His enemies could support the weight of their outrageous calumny,
xvii. 3; xxvi. 22, 23), and which Jesus had so often taught them (Matt. xvi. 21;
xvii. 1012; Luke xvii. 25; xxiv. 25-27, 46) to regard as the fulfillment of olden
prophecy (Ps. xxii.; Isa. 1. 6; liii. 2, &c.).
1 So we infer from the "barley loaves" of John vi. 9. Barley bread was so
little palatable that it was given by way of punishment to soldiers who had
incurred disgrace. ["Cohortes si quae cessissent, decimatas hordeo pavit "195
(Sueton, Aug. 24). "Cohortibus quae sigma dimiserant hordeum dari jussit "196
(Liv., xxvii. 13).] That the Jews had a similar feeling appears from an anecdote
in Pesachim, fol. 3, 2. Johanan said, "There is an excellent barley harvest."
They answered, "Tell that to horses and asses." (See Kuinoel on John vi. 9.)
248 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
"Behold a glutton and a wine-bibber." And yet Jesus, though poor,
was not a pauper. He did not for one moment countenance (as Sakya
Mouni did) the life of beggary, or say one word which could be per-
verted into a recommendation of that degrading squalor which some
religious teachers have represented as the perfection of piety. He
never received an alms from the tamchui or kuppa, but He and the
little company of His followers lived on their lawful possessions or
the produce of their own industry, and even had a bag1 or cash-box
of their own, both for their own use and for their charities to others.
From this they provided the simple necessaries of the Paschal feast,
and distributed what they could to the poor; only Christ does not
Himself seem to have given money to the poor, because He gave
them richer and nobler gifts than could be even compared with gold
or silver . Yet even the little money which they wanted was not
always forthcoming, and when the collectors of the trivial sum
demanded from the very poorest for the service of the Temple, came
to Peter, for the didrachma which was alone required, neither he nor
his Master had the sum at hand.2 The Son of Man had no earthly
possession besides the clothes He wore.
3. And it was, as we have seen, a life of toil of toil from boy-
hood upwards, in the shop of the carpenter, to aid in maintaining
Himself and His family by honest and noble labor; of toil afterwards
to save the world. We have seen that "He went about doing good,"
and that this, which is the epitome of His public life, constitutes also
its sublimest originality. The insight which we have gained already,
and shall gain still further, into the manner in which His days were
spent, shows us how overwhelming an amount of ever-active benevo-
lence was crowded into the brief compass of the hours of light. At
any moment He was at the service of any call, whether it came from
an inquirer who longed to be taught, or from a sufferer who had faith
to be healed. Teaching, preaching, travelling, doing works of mercy,
bearing patiently with the fretful impatience of the stiffnecked and
the ignorant, enduring without a murmur the incessant and selfish
pressure of the multitude work like this so absorbed His time and
1glwsso a]peti>qesan ta>j
glwttij a[lu ta>j pe tw?n kera mega ou]. Comp
Matt. xii. 7; 1 Sam. xv. 22; Deut. x. 12; Prov. xxi. 3; Eccles. xii. 13; Hosea vi.
6; Micah vi.; passages amply sufficient to have shown the Jews, had they
really, searched the Scriptures, the hollowness and falsity of the whole Pharisaic
system.
2 Matt. ix. 13, dmlv xc. On the interesting question of the language ordinarily
used by our Lord, see Chap. VII., p. 93.
3 Matt. ix. 14--17; Mark ii. 1822; Luke v. 3339. Apparently the Pharisees,
eager to seize any and every opportunity to oppose Him, and glad of a combina-
tion so powerful and so unwonted as that which enabled them to unite with John's
disciples, joined in this question also (Mark ii. 19).
272 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
useful, indeed, and obligatory, if any man felt that thereby he was
assisted in the mortification of anything which was evil in his nature
but worse than useless if it merely administered to his spiritual
pride, and led him to despise others. He might have pointed out to
them that although they had instituted a fast twice in the week,1 this
was but a traditional institution, so little sanctioned by the Mosaic
law, than in it but one single day of fasting was appointed for the
entire year.2 He might, too, have added that the reason why fast-
ing had not been made a universal duty is probably that spirit of
mercy which recognized how differently it worked upon different
temperaments, fortifying some against the attacks of temptation, but
only hindering others in the accomplishment of duty. Or again, He
might have referred them to those passages in their own Prophets,
which pointed out that, in the sight of God, the true fasting is not
mere abstinence from food while all the time the man is "smiting
with the fist of wickedness;" but rather to love mercy, and to do
justice, and to let the oppressed go free.3 But instead of all these
lessons, which; in their present state, might only have exasperated
their prejudices, He answers them only by a gentle argumentum ad
hominem. Referring to the fine image in which their own beloved
and revered teacher had spoken of Him as the bridegroom, He con-
tented Himself with asking them, "Can ye make the children of the
bridechamber fast,4 while the bridegroom is with them?" and then,
looking calmly down at the deep abyss which yawned before Him,
He uttered a saving which although at that time none probably
1 On Thursday, because on that day Moses was believed to have re-ascended
Mount Sinai; on Monday, because on that day he returned. Cf. Luke xviii. 12;
Babha Kama, f. 82 a.
2 The Day of Atonement (Lev. xvi. 29; Numb. xxix. 7). It appears that in the
period of the exile four annual fasts (in the fourth, fifth, seventh, and tenth months)
had sprung up, but they certainly receive no special sanction from the Prophets
(Zech. viii. 19; vii. 112). In the oldest and genuine part of the Megilla Taan,-
ith, which emanated from the schools of Hillel and Shammai, there is merely a
list of days on which fasting and mourning are forbidden. It will be found with
a translation in Derenbourg, Hist. Palestine, pp. 439--446. See too Lightfoot,
Hor. Hebr. in Matt. ix. 14.
3 See the many noble and splendid utterances of the Prophets to this effect
(Micah vi. 68; Hosea vi. 6; xii. 6; Amos v. 2124; Isa. i. 1020).
4 John iii. 29. The use of the word penqei?n, "mourn," instead of nhsteun au]twj.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 275
curiosity to witness what would be done for the ruler of the syna-
gogue. It was a woman who for twelve years had suffered from
a distressing malady, which unfitted her for all the relationships
of life, and which was peculiarly afflicting, because in the popular
mind it was regarded as a direct consequence of sinful habits
In vain had she wasted her substance and done fresh injury to
her health in the effort to procure relief from many different phy-
sicians,1 and now, as a last desperate resource, she would try what
could be gained without money and without price from the Great
Physician. Perhaps, in her ignorance, it was because she had
no longer any reward to offer; perhaps because she was ashamed in
her feminine modesty to reveal the malady from which she had been
suffering; but from whatever cause, she determined, as it were, to
steal from Him, unknown, the blessing for which she longed. And
so, with the strength and pertinacity of despair, she struggled in that
dense throng until she was near enough to touch Him; and then,
perhaps all the more violently from her extreme nervousness, she
grasped the white fringe of His robe. By the law of Moses every
Jew was to wear at each corner of his tallith a fringe or tassel,
bound by a riband of symbolic blue, to remind hint that he was holy
to God.2 Two of these fringes usually hung down at the bottom of
the robe; one hung over the shoulder where the robe was folded
round the person. It was probably this one that she touched3 with
secret and trembling haste, and then, feeling instantly that she had
gained her desire and was healed, she shrank back unnoticed into the
throng. Unnoticed by others, but not by Christ. Perceiving that
healing power had one out of Him, recognizing the one magnetic
touch of timid faith even amid the pressure of the crowd, He stopped
and asked, "Who touched my clothes?" There was something
almost impatient in the reply of Peter, as though in such a throng he
1 Mark v. 26. polla> paqou?sa u[po> pollw?n i]atrw?n. The physician Evangelist St. Luke (viii. 43); mentions that in this attempt she had wasted all her substance (o!lon to>n bi o[ Pej parado de> pa?n, o!per soi r[oph>n a}n prosqein au]tou? (Matt. xiv. 2). The Hebrew Mydbf means more than
servants," and hence is rendered by pai?j and fi e@legon, k.t.l.; they kept looking for
Him, and saying," &c.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 399
Jews," and of the leading Priests and Pharisees, had not been fin-
ally or decisively declared.
And suddenly, in the midst of all these murmurs and discussions,
in the middle of the feast, Jesus, unaccompanied apparently by His
followers, unheralded by His friends, appeared suddenly in the Tem-
ple, and taught. By what route Be had reached the holy City
how he had passed through the bright thronged streets unnoticed
whether He joined in the innocent mirth of the festival whether
He too lived in a little succah, of palm-leaves during the remainder
of the week, and wandered among the brightly-dressed crowds of
an Oriental gala day with the lulab and citron in His hands
whether His voice was heard in the Hallel, or the Great Hosanna
we do not know. All that is told us is that, throwing himself, as it
were, in full confidence on the protection of His disciples from Gal-
ilee and those in Jerusalem, He was suddenly found seated in one of
the large halls which opened out of the Temple courts, and there He
taught.
For a time they listened to Him in awe-struck silence; but soon
the old scruples recurred to them. "He is no authorized Rabbi; He
belongs to no recognized school; neither the followers of hill I nor
those of Shamnmai claim Him; He is a Nazarene ; lie was trained in
the shop of the Galilaean carpenter; how knoweth this man letters,
having never learned?" As though the few who are taught of God
whose learning is the learning of a pure heart and an enlightened
eye and a blameless life did not unspeakably transcend in wisdom,
and therefore also in the best and truest knowledge, those whose
learning has but come from other men! It is not the voice of erudi-
tion, but it is, as the old Greek thinker says, the voice of Inspiration
the voice of the divine Sibyl which, uttering things simple and
unperfumed and unadorned, reacheth through myriads of years.
Jesus understood their looks. He interpreted their murmurs. He
told then that His learning came immediately from His Heavenly
Father, and that they, too, if they did God's will, might learn, and
might understand, the same high lessons. In all ages there is a ten-
dency to mistake erudition for learning, knowledge for wisdom; in
all ages there has been a slowness to comprehend that true learning
of the deepest and noblest character may co-exist with complete and
utter ignorance of everything which absorbs and constitutes the
learning of the schools. In one senseJesus told His hearers
they knew the law which Moses had given them; in another they
were pitiably ignorant of it. They could not understand its princi-
400 THE LIFE OF CHRIST
ples, because they were not "faithful to its precepts."1 And then
He asked them openly, "Why go ye about to kill me?"
That determination to kill Him was known indeed to Him, and
known to some of those who heard Him, but was a guilty secret
which had been concealed from the majority of the multitude.
These answered the question, while the others kept their guilty
silence. "Thou halt a devil," the people answered;1 "who goeth
about to kill Thee?" Why did they speak with such superfluous
and brutal bluntness? Do not we repudiate, with far less flaming
indignation, a charge which we know to be not only false, but wholly
preposterous and foundationless? Was there not in the minds even
of this not yet wholly alienated multitude an uneasy sense of their
distance from the Speaker of that unutterable superiority to them-
selves which pained and shamed and irritated them? Were they not
conscious, in their carnal and vulgar aspirations, that this Prophet
came, not to condescend to such views as theirs, but to raise them to
a region where they felt that they could not breathe? Was there
not even then in their hearts something of the half-unconscious hatred
of vice to virtue, the repulsion of darkness against light? Would
they have said, "Thou hast a devil," when they heard Him say that
some of them were plotting against His life, if they had not felt that
they were themselves capable at almost any moment of joining in
aye, with their own hands of executing so base a plot?
Jesus did not notice their coarse insolence. He referred them to
that one work of healing on the Sabbath day,' at which they were all
still marvelling, with an empty wonder, that He who had the power
to perform such a deed should, in performing it, have risen above
their empty, ceremonial, fetish-worshipping notions of Sabbath sanc-
tity. And Jesus, who ever loved to teach the lesson that love and
not literalism is the fulfilling of the Law, showed them, even on their
own purely ritual and Levitical principle, that His word of healing
had in no respect violated the Sabbath at all. For instance, Moses
had established, or rather re-established, the ordinance of circumcis-
ion on the eighth day, and if that eighth day happened to be a Sab-
bath, they without scruple sacrificed the one ordinance to the other,
and in spite of the labor which it involved, performed the rite of
circumcision on the Sabbath day. If the law of circumcision super-
seded that of the Sabbath, did not the law of Mercy? If it was
1Cf. Ecclus. xxi. 11,"He that keepeth the law of the Lord getteth the understand-
ing thereof." (John xiv. 15-17, 20, 21; see too Job xxviii. 28.)
2 John vii. 20, 6 o[ ou@xloj, not oi[ ]Ioudai?oi.
3 John v. 5.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 401
right by a series of actions to inflict that wound, was it wrong by a
single word to effect a total cure?1 If that, which was at the best
but a sign of deliverance, could not even on account of the Sabbath
be postponed for a single day, why was it criminal not to have post-
poned for the sake of the Sabbath a deliverance actual and entire ?
And then He summed His self-defence in the one calm word, Do
not be ever judging by the mere appearance, but judge a righteous
judgment;" 2 instead of being permanently content with a superfi-
cial mode of criticism, come once for all to some principle of right-
eous decision.
His hearers were perplexed and amazed, "Is this He against
whose life some are plotting? Can He be the Messiah? Nay, He
cannot be; for we know whence this speaker comes, whereas they
say that none shall know whence the Messiah shall have come when
he appears."
There was a certain irony in the answer of Jesus. They knew
whence He came and all about Him, and yet, in very truth, He
came not of Himself, but from one of whom they knew nothing.
This word maddened still more some of Ills hearers. They longed
but did not dare to seize Him, and all the more because there were
some whom these words convinced, and who appealed to His many
miracles as irresistible proof of His sacred claims.3 The Sanhedrin,
seated in frequent session in their stone hall of meeting within the
immediate precincts of the Temple, were, by means of their emis-
saries, kept-informed of all that He did and said, and, without seem-
ing to do so, watched His every movement with malignant and
jealous eyes. These whispered arguments in His favor, this deep-
ened awe of Him and belief in Him, which, despite their authority,
was growing up under their very eyes, seemed to them at once
humiliating and dangerous. They determined on a bolder course
of action. They sent out emissaries to seize Him suddenly and
stealthily, at the first opportunity which should occur. But Jesus
1 Stier quotes from the Rabbis a remark to this very effect, "Circumcision,
which is one of the 248 members of the body, supersedes the Sabbath; how much
more the whole body of a man?"
2 John vii. 24, mh> koi . . . kri tw?n ]Ellh from the style of St. John through-
out the rest of the Gospel. Several of these arguments are 'weakened (i.) by
the fact that the diversities of readings may be reduced to three main recensions
(ii.) that the rejection of the passage may have been due to a false dogmatical
bias; (iii.) that the silence of some of the Fathers may be accidental, and of others
prudential. The arguments in its favor are 1. It is found in some old and
THE LIFE OF CHRIST. 407
At the close of the day recorded in the last chapter, Jesus with-
drew to the Mount of Olives. Whether He went to the garden of
Gethsemane, and to the house of its unknown but friendly owner, or
whethernot having where to lay His headHe simply slept,
Eastern fashion, on the green turf under those ancient olive-trees, we
cannot tell ; but it is interesting to trace in Him once more that dislike
of crowded cities, that love for the pure, sweet, fresh air, and for the
quiet of the lonely hill, which we see in all parts of His career on
earth. There was, indeed, in Him nothing of that supercilious sen-
timentality and morbid egotism which makes men shrink from all
contact with their brother-men; nor can they who would be His
true servants belong to those merely fantastic philanthropists
"Who sigh for wretchedness, yet shun the wretched,
Nursing in some delicious solitude
Their dainty loves and slothful sympathies."
COLERIDGE, Religious Musings.
On the contrary, day after day, while His day-time of work continued,
we find Him sacrificing all that was dearest and most elevating to His
soul, and in spite of heat, and pressure, and conflict, and weariness,
calmly pursuing His labors of love amid "the madding crowd's
ignoble strife." But in the night-time, when men cannot work, no
call of duty required His presence within the walls of Jerusalem;
and those who are familiar with the oppressive foulness of ancient
important uncials (D, F, G, H, K, U) and in more than 300 cursive MSS., in some
of the Itala, and in the Vulgate. 2. The tendencies which led to its deliberate
rejection would have rendered all but impossible its invention or interpolation.
3. It is quoted by Augustine, Ambrose, and Jerome, and treated as genuine in the
Apostolic constitutions. St. Jerome's testimony (Adv. Pelag. ii. 6) is particularly
important, because he says that in his time it was found "in multis et Graecis et
Latinis codicibus"294 and it must be remembered that nearly all of these must
have been considerably older than any which we now possess. The main facts
to be observed are, that though the dogmatic bias against the passage might be
sufficient to account for its rejection, it gives us no help in explaining its want of
resemblance to the style of St. John. A very simple hypothesis will account for
all difficulties. If we suppose that the story of the woman accused before our
Lord of many sins to which Eusebius alludes (H.E. iii. 39) as existing in the
Gospel of the Hebrewsis identical with this, we may suppose, without any
improbability, either (i.) that St. John (as Alford hesitatingly suggests) may here
have adopted a portion of current synoptic tradition, or (ii.) that the story may
have been derived originally from Papias, the pupil of St. John, and having
found its way into the Gospel of the Hebrews, may have been adopted gradually
into some MSS. of St. John's Gospel (see Euseb. ubi supr.). Many recent writers
adopt. the suggestion of Holtzmann, that it belongs to the "Ur-marcus," or ground
document of the Synoptists. Whoever embodied into the Gospels this tradition-
ally-remembered story deserved well of the world.
408 THE LIFE OF CHRIST.
cities can best imagine the relief which His spirit must have felt
when lie could escape from the close streets and thronged bazaars, to
cross the ravine, and climb the green slope beyond it, and be alone
with His Heavenly Father under the starry night.
But when the day dawned His duties lay once more within the
city walls, and in that part of the city where, almost alone we hear
of His presencein the courts of His Father's house. And with
the very dawn His enemies contrived a fresh plot against Him, the
circumstances of which made their malice even more actually painful
than it was intentionally perilous.
It is probable that the hilarity and abandonment of the Feast of
Tabernacles, which had grown to be a kind of vintage festival, would
often degenerate into acts of license and immorality, and these would
find more numerous opportunities in the general disturbance of ordi-
nary life caused by the dwelling of the whole people in their little
leafy booths. One such act had been detected during the previous
night, and the guilty woman had been handed over to the Scribes1
and Pharisees.
Even had the morals of the nation at that time been as clean as in
the days when Moses ordained the fearful ordeal of the "water of
jealousy" 2 even had these rulers and teachers of the nation been
elevated as far above their contemporaries in the real, as in the pro-
fessed, sanctity of their livesthe discovery, and the threatened
punishment, of this miserable adulteress could hardly have failed to
move every pure and noble mind to a compassion which would have
mingled largely with the horror which her sin inspired. They might,
indeed, even on those suppositions, have inflicted the established pen-
alty with a sternness as inflexible as that of the Pilgrim fathers in
early days of Salem or Providence; but the sternness of a severe and
pure-hearted judge is not a sternness which precludes all pity; it is a
sternness which would not willingly inflict one unnecessary pang
it is a sternness not incompatible with a righteous tenderness, but
wholly incompatible with a mixture of meaner and slighter motives,
wholly incompatible with a spirit of malignant levity and hideous
sport.
But the spirit which actuated these Scribes and Pharisees was not
by any means the spirit of a sincere and outraged purity. In the
1 It is observable that in no other passage of St.. John's Gospel (though frequently
in the Synoptists) are the Scribes mentioned among the enemies of Christ; but
here a few MSS. read of oi[ a]rxierei?j, "the chief priests."
2 See Numb. v. 14-29.
THE LIFE OF CHRIST 409
decadence of national life, in the daily familiarity with heathen deg-
radations, in the gradual substitution of a Levitical scrupulosity for
a heartfelt religion, the morals of the nation had grown utterly cor-
rupt. The ordeal of the "water of jealousy" had long been abol-
ished, and the death by stoning as a punishment for adultery had
long been. suffered to fall into desuetude. Not even the Scribes and
Pharisees for all their external religiosity had any genuine horror
of an impurity with which their own lives were often stained.2 They
saw in the accident which had put this guilty woman into their power
nothing but a chance of annoying, entrapping, possibly even endan-
gering this Prophet of Galilee, whom they already regarded as their
deadliest enemy.
It was a curious custom among the Jews to consult distinguished
Rabbis in cases of doubt and difficulty;2 but there was no doubt or
difficulty here. It was long since the Mosaic law of death to the
adulteress had beet demanded or enforced; and even if this had not
been the case, the Roman law would, in all probability, have pre-
vented such a sentence from being put in execution. On the other
hand, the civil and religious penalties of divorce were open to the
injured husband; nor did the case of this woman differ from that of
any other who had similarly transgressed. Nor, again, even if they
had honestly and sincerely desired the opinion of Jesus, could there
have been the slightest excuse for haling the woman herself into His
presence, and thus subjecting her to a moral torture which would be
rendered all the more insupportable from the close seclusion of
women in the East.
And, therefore, to subject her to the superfluous horror of this odious
publicity to drag her, fresh from the agony of detection, into the
sacred precincts of the Temple3to subject this unveiled, dishevelled,
terror-stricken woman to the cold and sensual curiosity of a malignant
mob to make her, with total disregard to her own sufferings, the
mere passive instrument of their hatred against Jesus; and to do all
this not under the pressure of moral indignation, but in order to
1 As is distinctly proved by the admissions of the Talmud, and by the express
testimony of Josephus. In the tract Sotah it is clear that the Mosaic ordeal of
the "water of jealousy" had fallen into practical desuetude from the commonness
of the crime. We are there told that R. Johanan Ben Zakkai abolished the use
of it (see Surenhusius, Mischna, ii. 290,293).
2 Sepp, Leben Jesu, iv. 2, 17.
3 It is indeed said in the Talmud (Sotah, 1, 5) that adulteresses were to be judged
at the gate of Nikanor, between the Court of the Gentiles and that of the women
(Surenhusius, Mischna, iii, 189); but this does not apply to the there loose asking
of an opinion, such as this was.
410 THE LIFE OF CHRIST
gratify a calculating malice showed on their parts a cold, hard cyn-
icism, a graceless, pitiless, barbarous brutality of heart and conscience,
which could not but prove, in every particular, revolting and hateful
to One who alone was infinitely tender, because He alone was infi-
nitely pure.
And so they dragged her to Him, and set her in the midst--
flagrant guilt subjected to the gaze of stainless Innocence, degraded
misery set before the bar of perfect Mercy. And then, just as though
their hearts were not full of outrage, they glibly begin, with ironical
deference, to set before Him their case. Master, this woman was
seized in the very act of adultery. Now, Moses in the Law com-
manded us to stone1 such; but what sayest Thou about her?"
They thought that now they had caught Him in a dilemma. They
knew the divine, trembling pity which had loved where others hated,
and praised where others scorned, and encouraged where others
crushed; and they knew how that pity had won for Him the admi-
ration of many, the passionate devotion of not a few. They knew
that a publican was among His chosen, that sinners had sat with Him
at the banquet, and harlots unreproved had bathed His feet, and
listened to His words. Would He then acquit this woman, and so
make Himself liable to an accusation of heresy, by placing Himself
in open disaccord with the sacred and fiery Law? or, on the other
hand, would He belie His own compassion, and be ruthless, and con-
demn? And, if He did, would He not at once shock the multitude,
who were touched by His tenderness, and offend the civil magistrates
by making Himself liable to a charge of sedition? How could He
possibly get out of the difficulty? Either alternative -- heresy or
treason, accusation before the Sanhedrin or delation to the Procu-
rator, opposition to the orthodox or alienation from the many would
serve equally well their unscrupulous intentions. And one of these,
they thought, must follow. What a happy chance this weak, guilty